> First question: do you have the firmware-realtek package installed?
That... is a great question. And the answer is no, I do not.
And I have now installed firmware-realtek, and it has solved my problem.
That's what I get for buying a mobo without researching the network chip.
Thanks so much!
On Mon, 28 Nov 2022 19:31:06 -0800
Matthew McAllister wrote:
> 05:00.0 Ethernet controller: Realtek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. RTL8125
> 2.5GbE Controller (rev 05)
First question: do you have the firmware-realtek package installed?
--
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On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 10:27 PM Cousin Stanley wrote:
> $ sudo raspi-config
>
> select
>
> interface
>
> ssh
Worked perfectly. Thank you. And from me: Duh...
> I don't remember if a reboot is required
I'm not sure because I didn't try both ways, but it asked if
Glenn English wrote:
>
> Anyone know the incantation to make the s word start ssh
>
You might try
$ sudo raspi-config
select
interface
ssh
I don't remember if a reboot is required
--
Stanley C. Kitching
Human Being
Phoenix, Arizon
On 2018-10-31 20:33, Brian wrote:
On Wed 31 Oct 2018 at 18:21:54 +, Glenn English wrote:
stretch, RPi
Just installed stretch on an RPi. SSH doesn't start on boot. No
problem with postfix, apache, proftp, bind, etc, as far as I know.
I would probably install again and choose *only* the ss
On Wed 31 Oct 2018 at 18:21:54 +, Glenn English wrote:
> stretch, RPi
>
> Just installed stretch on an RPi. SSH doesn't start on boot. No
> problem with postfix, apache, proftp, bind, etc, as far as I know.
I would probably install again and choose *only* the ssh task. It's
10 minutes of my
On 2018-10-31 18:21, Glenn English wrote:
find anything about where to put the data.
Anyone know the incantation to make the s word start ssh? A link to
clear dox on the innards of s.*d would probably be enough. So would a
quick howto.
"systemctl enable sshd"
isn't it ?
mick
--
Key ID4B
On 10/31/2018 7:21 PM, Glenn English wrote:
> stretch, RPi
>
> Just installed stretch on an RPi. SSH doesn't start on boot. No
> problem with postfix, apache, proftp, bind, etc, as far as I know.
>
> I tried to have it start at boot via Webmin; systemd said it wouldn't
> do that without a command
Hi.
On Wed, Oct 31, 2018 at 06:21:54PM +, Glenn English wrote:
> stretch, RPi
Is it stretch or Raspbian stretch?
> Just installed stretch on an RPi. SSH doesn't start on boot. No
> problem with postfix, apache, proftp, bind, etc, as far as I know.
So it's Raspbian stretch.
https:/
On Fri, 20 Dec 2013 09:33:01 +0700
Diogene Laerce wrote:
>
>
> On 12/20/2013 03:44 AM, André Nunes Batista wrote:
> > On Thu, 2013-12-19 at 15:11 +0700, Diogene Laerce wrote:
> >
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >> Does anybody can tell me where I need to go to configure the console
> >> I get before X star
On Fri, Dec 20, 2013 at 09:33:01AM +0700, Diogene Laerce wrote:
>
>
> On 12/20/2013 03:44 AM, André Nunes Batista wrote:
> >On Thu, 2013-12-19 at 15:11 +0700, Diogene Laerce wrote:
> >>Hi,
> >>
> >>Does anybody can tell me where I need to go to configure the console
> >>I get before X starts ?
>
On 12/20/2013 03:33 AM, Diogene Laerce wrote:
> On 12/20/2013 03:44 AM, André Nunes Batista wrote:
>> You get xterm before X starts? Go on...
> Sorry but I don't understand your answer : I want to configure and use
> the console when X isn't started.
The console you see before X is started is /not
On 12/20/2013 03:44 AM, André Nunes Batista wrote:
On Thu, 2013-12-19 at 15:11 +0700, Diogene Laerce wrote:
Hi,
Does anybody can tell me where I need to go to configure the console
I get before X starts ?
For now, I get xterm and a minimal env setup, I'd like to configure those ?
I alrea
I'm not sure what you want to change, but I use
dpkg-reconfigure console-setup
and editing of
/etc/default/console-setup
Thanks for your answer but this actually configure how the
console present itself. I'd like to choose wether xterm or not is used
as default console when X isn't started
On Thu, 2013-12-19 at 15:11 +0700, Diogene Laerce wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Does anybody can tell me where I need to go to configure the console
> I get before X starts ?
>
> For now, I get xterm and a minimal env setup, I'd like to configure those ?
> I already tried and choose terminator :
>
> sudo upd
I'm not sure what you want to change, but I use
dpkg-reconfigure console-setup
and editing of
/etc/default/console-setup
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On 04/03/13 06:07 PM, mess-mate wrote:
Hi,
any idea why the startup-manager wont continue his task ?
I've installed all what his needed grb2, grub-pc, etc..
The manager start and do a pre-configuration and stops.
thanks
Can you provide further information? I don't use it myself but is ther
http://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2012/11/msg00679.html
On every startup, on the initial {black screen, white text} I get
errors beginning with
> Mount point '/run' does not exist. Skipping mount.
and ending (just before it goes to X) with many (10 > n > 100) lines
beg
On Fri, Nov 16, 2012 at 03:22:40PM +1100, Igor Cicimov wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 16, 2012 at 2:47 PM, Tom Roche wrote:
>
> >
> > What must one do to make /run mount appropriately on startup if one has
> > a separate /var partition? What I mean, why I ask:
> >
> > I suspect this is related to having a
You're quasi running Sid, this explains that you could run into trouble.
Some software does expect:
spinymouse@qrc:~$ df -hl | grep run
tmpfs 741M 944K 740M 1% /run
none5.0M 0 5.0M 0% /run/lock
none1.9G 0 1.9G 0% /run/shm
none100M
On Fri, Nov 16, 2012 at 4:40 PM, Tom Roche wrote:
>
> http://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2012/11/msg00679.html
> >> On every startup, on the initial {black screen, white text} I get
> >> errors beginning with
>
> >> > Mount point '/run' does not exist. Skipping mount.
>
> >> and ending (just bef
http://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2012/11/msg00679.html
>> On every startup, on the initial {black screen, white text} I get
>> errors beginning with
>> > Mount point '/run' does not exist. Skipping mount.
>> and ending (just before it goes to X) with many (10 > n > 100) lines
>> beginning wit
On Fri, 16 Nov 2012 15:22:40 +1100
Igor Cicimov wrote:
> Since /run is meant to replace all temporary filesystems in RAM I
> would expect this to be other way around, ie /var/run to be symlinked
> to /run. So /run should be a tmpfs and /run/shm and /run/lock part of
> it. Also /dev/shm should ne s
On Fri, Nov 16, 2012 at 2:47 PM, Tom Roche wrote:
>
> What must one do to make /run mount appropriately on startup if one has
> a separate /var partition? What I mean, why I ask:
>
> Awhile ago, I got a new box with win7 preinstalled. I repartitioned,
> adding separate partitions for swap, /, /bo
PS:
> > I suspect this is related to having a separate /var partition,
> > since, once the box is booted and I'm logged in, I see that
Yes, it is related. A known issue for the transition.
While I know this from Arch Linux I found a link in German regarding
to Debian:
The Germany words describe
On Thu, 15 Nov 2012 22:47:12 -0500
Tom Roche wrote:
>
> What must one do to make /run mount appropriately on startup if one
> has a separate /var partition? What I mean, why I ask:
>
> Awhile ago, I got a new box with win7 preinstalled. I repartitioned,
> adding separate partitions for swap, /,
On Lu, 02 iul 12, 19:14:45, Tony van der Hoff wrote:
> >
> Neither of those variables is set here, so ~/.config/autostart looks
> promising. Sadly, putting the link to my script in there doesn't cause
> it to be run on login.
~/.config/autostart is for .desktop files. You can use one to call your
On 02/07/12 20:39, rjc wrote:
>
> Try here:
> http://docs.kde.org/stable/en/kde-workspace/kcontrol/autostart/index.html
>
Ah, thanks.
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On Mon, Jul 02, 2012 at 06:14:45PM BST, Tony van der Hoff wrote:
> >> As mentioned, I have a link to that script in ~/kde/autostart.
> >> Unfortunately it doesn't autostart.
> >
> > And it won't.
>
> Why not? You chastise me for giving insufficient information, but you're
> equally terse ;)
Sorr
Thanks, rjc, for a very informative post. Unfortunately, my setup (Stock
Debian 6.0.5) doesn't seem to agree with your description.
On 01/07/12 19:31, rjc wrote:
>
>> The reason I asked here is because I previously tried doing exactly what
>> you suggest by putting a link in ~/.kde/Autostart to th
On Mon, Jul 02, 2012 at 04:38:50AM BST, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> On Du, 01 iul 12, 18:31:24, rjc wrote:
> >
> > Desktop Environments or Window Managers do not run $SHELL startup
> > files, nor should they.
> No, but some display managers do :)
> At least gdm (and gdm3 IIRC) and kdm do this, which s
On Du, 01 iul 12, 18:31:24, rjc wrote:
>
> Desktop Environments or Window Managers do not run $SHELL startup
> files, nor should they.
No, but some display managers do :)
At least gdm (and gdm3 IIRC) and kdm do this, which should cover most
users.
Kind regards,
Andrei
--
Offtopic discussions a
On Sun, Jul 01, 2012 at 02:05:47PM BST, Tony van der Hoff wrote:
> Thanks, Claudius. This is primarily for KDE, but I would expect it to
> work for a console login as well. Does KDE try to run ~/.bashrc or
> ~/.profile?
No it doesn't.
Desktop Environments or Window Managers do not run $SHELL star
Hello Tony,
Tony van der Hoff wrote:
> On 01/07/12 13:01, Claudius Hubig wrote:
> Thanks, Claudius. This is primarily for KDE, but I would expect it to
> work for a console login as well. Does KDE try to run ~/.bashrc or
> ~/.profile?
I doubt that it runs .bashrc, but it may well run .profile. I
On 01/07/12 13:01, Claudius Hubig wrote:
> Hello Tony,
>
> Tony van der Hoff wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I have a script (non gui) which I want to run each time I log in. Which
>> is the correct way to do this?
>
> Log in on a TTY/console or into a desktop environment? KDE, Xfce and
> GNOME all have aut
Hello Tony,
Tony van der Hoff wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a script (non gui) which I want to run each time I log in. Which
> is the correct way to do this?
Log in on a TTY/console or into a desktop environment? KDE, Xfce and
GNOME all have autostart settings, other non-DE graphical interfaces
usual
Put it in your $HOME, create the script with the first line:
#! /bin/bash
# This is your script called myScript
echo "my script is running!" # you may not need this line!
then put this line in your ~/.profile file:
# include .bashrc if it exists
if [ -f "$HOME/.myScript" ]; then
. "$
On Fri 19 Aug 2011 at 06:39:05 -0400, Jesse Sheidlower wrote:
>
> I'm running Xfce under wheezy on a desktop system. I have two monitors
> permanently attached to the computer; that is, I never need to do any
> configuration on the fly.
>
> To set up dual-head, I run the simple command
>
> x
On Mon,11.May.09, 10:47:18, Peter Crawford wrote:
>
> Since release of an overhauled Xfce to Squeeze about a week ago,
> Skype no longer starts automatically. The gadget for invoking
> applications at startup appears to have been removed. Is there
> a new method to specify startup application
On Thu, 2009-01-15 at 22:18 -0500, Celejar wrote:
> On Fri, 16 Jan 2009 15:30:45 +1300
> Richard Hector wrote:
>
> ...
>
> > I'd quite like to have an option to opt-out of a fsck anyway; it's
> > really annoying when I'm just turning it on for a few minutes to check
> > my mail before I rush out
On Fri, 16 Jan 2009 15:30:45 +1300
Richard Hector wrote:
...
> I'd quite like to have an option to opt-out of a fsck anyway; it's
> really annoying when I'm just turning it on for a few minutes to check
> my mail before I rush out the door.
>
> Richard
There was a thread about this several mon
On Thu, 2009-01-15 at 20:58 -0500, Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 13, 2009 at 05:20:53AM -0600, Ron Johnson wrote:
> > On 01/13/09 04:40, elektra wrote:
> > [snip]
>
> > >The startup scripts issue a warning of the kind "Warning! Skipping file
> > >system check because the system is running
On Tue, Jan 13, 2009 at 05:20:53AM -0600, Ron Johnson wrote:
> On 01/13/09 04:40, elektra wrote:
> [snip]
> >The startup scripts issue a warning of the kind "Warning! Skipping file
> >system check because the system is running on battery power" - I don't
> >know the exact wording - so the sysadm
On 01/13/09 04:40, elektra wrote:
[snip]
I think the reason is that the startup scripts of the Lenny version I was
running (installed with the netinstall cd in June or July on a Asus EEE PC
901 and frequently updated until it broke on Dezember 23rd 2008) omits the
file system check if it dete
elektra wrote:
> Hi -
>
> sorry I can't use reportbug because I am not using Debian anymore. Using the
> bug-report search engine I couldn't find a report related to my experience. I
> don't know the name of the Debian package which contains the feature that I
> assume has messed up the data in
On Wednesday 20 August 2008 05:17, Pol Hallen wrote:
> > This may sound pretty out of place but can anyone list ways on how
> > to make a program execute on startup?
>
> U can either add the program in /etc/init.d/ and link it in your favorite
> runlevel or add the program in your desktop manag
Rod James Bio wrote:
Hi,
This may sound pretty out of place but can anyone list ways on how to
make a program execute on startup?
I am trying to a script to make my program a daemon but I was just
wandering if there are any other ways to do this?
If you mean to start a program for your
Rod James Bio wrote:
Hi,
This may sound pretty out of place but can anyone list ways on how to
make a program execute on startup?
I am trying to a script to make my program a daemon but I was just
wandering if there are any other ways to do this?
Something in the init scripts will work
Ron Johnson wrote:
On 08/20/08 05:05, Rod James Bio wrote:
Ron Johnson wrote:
On 08/20/08 03:33, Rod James Bio wrote:
Hi,
This may sound pretty out of place but can anyone list ways on
how to make a program execute on startup?
I am trying to a script to make my program a daemon but I was
On 08/20/08 05:05, Rod James Bio wrote:
Ron Johnson wrote:
On 08/20/08 03:33, Rod James Bio wrote:
Hi,
This may sound pretty out of place but can anyone list ways on how
to make a program execute on startup?
I am trying to a script to make my program a daemon but I was just
To *write* a
Ron Johnson wrote:
On 08/20/08 03:33, Rod James Bio wrote:
Hi,
This may sound pretty out of place but can anyone list ways on how
to make a program execute on startup?
I am trying to a script to make my program a daemon but I was just
To *write* a script?
wandering if there are any oth
On 08/20/08 03:33, Rod James Bio wrote:
Hi,
This may sound pretty out of place but can anyone list ways on how to
make a program execute on startup?
I am trying to a script to make my program a daemon but I was just
To *write* a script?
wandering if there are any other ways to do this?
> This may sound pretty out of place but can anyone list ways on how
> to make a program execute on startup?
U can either add the program in /etc/init.d/ and link it in your favorite
runlevel or add the program in your desktop manager config (if u using kde
add the program in /home/user/.kde/
On Fri, Jan 25, 2008 at 03:26:52PM +0100, Pol Hallen wrote:
> I've asus P5B-E motherboard with debian stable.
>
> First 6disks (integrated controller: sata1-sata6) for raid (not implemented
> yet) and boot disk (integrated sata7).
>
> The problem is: sometimes debian probe boot disk (sata7) on s
On 10/16/2006 08:15 AM, Andrew Critchlow wrote:
Can anyone give me a rundown on how startup scripts work in debian and how you would star up services upon system startup etc. Plus what are these cmds and their meanings:
invoke-rd.d name restart
/etc/inid.d/name restart
What is this init.d?
--- Andrew Critchlow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Can anyone give me a rundown on how startup scripts
> work in debian and how you would star up services
> upon system startup etc. Plus what are these cmds
> and their meanings:
>
> invoke-rd.d name restart
> /etc/inid.d/name restart
>
> Wha
On Mon, 16 Oct 2006 13:15:44 +
Andrew Critchlow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Can anyone give me a rundown on how startup scripts work in debian
> and how you would star up services upon system startup etc. Plus what
> are these cmds and their meanings: invoke-rd.d name restart
> /etc/inid.d/na
Glenn English writes:
> Does anybody know why startup scripts are always shell scripts?
Do you mean an init script? I'd be very suspicious of any init script
complex enough to justify the use of Perl.
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On Tue, Jul 12, 2005 at 12:16:25AM -0600, Ð∂äđ vÎяũŞ wrote:
> hey, can anyone tell me what i would have to do to remove programs from the
> system bootup? there are 2 servers that i want to remove from the system
> bootup but keep on my computer and have full control over their startup and
> shu
On Tue, Jul 12, 2005 at 12:16:25AM -0600, Ð∂äđ vÎяũŞ wrote:
> hey, can anyone tell me what i would have to do to remove programs from the
> system bootup? there are 2 servers that i want to remove from the system
> bootup
> but keep on my computer and have full control over their startup and shutd
Mr Mike wrote:
>On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 00:16:25 -0600, wrote:
>
>
>
>>hey, can anyone tell me what i would have to do to remove programs from the
>>system bootup? there are 2 servers that i want to remove from the system
>>bootup but keep on my computer and have full control over their startup an
On Tue, 12 Jul 2005 00:16:25 -0600, wrote:
> hey, can anyone tell me what i would have to do to remove programs from the
> system bootup? there are 2 servers that i want to remove from the system
> bootup but keep on my computer and have full control over their startup and
> shutdown, i would l
On Thu, 8 Jul 2004 15:30:10 +0100 (BST)
Thomas Adam <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- mixo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Is there a tool similar to redhat's chkconfig managing startup scripts
> >
> > for debian?
>
> I've answered this in some many other threads, this has to be *the* most
>
--- mixo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is there a tool similar to redhat's chkconfig managing startup scripts
> for debian?
I've answered this in some many other threads, this has to be *the* most
FAQ ever. However, what you're probably after is to:
# apt-get install rcconf
Which is cluebie-fr
Sorry that was a "PEBKAC"
My Kernel version is 2.4.26.
Cheers Brian
s. keeling wrote:
Incoming from Brian:
on Suse (the versions I have seen) and the Fedora version I have seen its
easy to tell which services have started OK. But For some reason I am
missing this in Debian. I am running a 2.2.26
Incoming from Brian:
>
> on Suse (the versions I have seen) and the Fedora version I have seen its
> easy to tell which services have started OK. But For some reason I am
> missing this in Debian. I am running a 2.2.26 Kernel which is a Knoppix HD
> Install.
2.2.x is getting pretty long in the
On Fri, 21 May 2004 09:25:57 +0200, Philippe Dhont (Sea-ro) wrote:
> I installed new kernel which works fine but when i do a reboot i also
> get in the upstart process:
>
> Give root password for maintenance
> (or type control-D for normal startup)
>
> Of course i press control-D but how can i
Hello
Philippe Dhont (Sea-ro) (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
> I installed new kernel which works fine but when i do a reboot i also
> get in the upstart process:
>
> Give root password for maintenance
> (or type control-D for normal startup)
>
> Of course i press control-D but how can i remove
* Christopher J. Noyes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2004-03-30 13:05:07]:
> what file controls what programs are started up at boot time. I installed some
> stuff, but now don't want them starting up every time it boots. I would like to
> remove them for the time being but be able to add them again later
The programs started up at boot time in each runlevel are contoled by
the scripts in /etc/rc.d, in debian the graphical runlevel is 2.
The scripts whose first letter is 'S', are programs that will be started
up in this runlevel, if this letter is 'K', the program is killed if it
has been started
Incoming from Christopher J. Noyes:
> what file controls what programs are started up at boot time. I
installed some stuff, but now don't want them starting up every time
it boots. I would like to remove them for the time being but be able
to add them again later if I want them.
Hit a carriage re
Title: Message
I
believe all the startup scripts are in /etc/init.d
Instead of removing them try just removing the execute attribute from the
file.
chmod
-x
See
how that goes.
-Original Message-From: Christopher J.
Noyes [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, Mar
Sometime near Wed, Jan 14, 2004 at 02:34:22PM -0600, Rick Weinbender wrote:
> Is this proper way to add my script to startup?
> Will this gracefully shutdown any apps my script calls
> if I do a cntrl-alt-del at the keyboard?
Sure is, however for your script to unload itself it needs to accept the
On Wed, 07 Jan 2004 08:09:49 +0200, Marc Hultquist wrote:
> Just wanted to ask
>
> Ok well using apt-get through the proxy here at work, finally started
> working, basically I had to import a global variable I.E export
> http_proxy="blabla/"
>
> Now what I wanted to ask, is how do I create a sta
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
Kent West <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Marc Hultquist wrote:
>
>> Ok well using apt-get through the proxy here at work, finally started
>> working, basically I had to import a global variable I.E export
>> http_proxy="blabla/"
>>
>> Now what I wanted to ask, is h
"Marc Hultquist" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Ok well using apt-get through the proxy here at work, finally
> started working, basically I had to import a global variable
>
> I.E export http_proxy="blabla/"
>
> Now what I wanted to ask, is how do I create a startup script in
> Debian, so that whe
Marc Hultquist wrote:
Ok well using apt-get through the proxy here at work, finally started
working, basically I had to import a global variable I.E export
http_proxy="blabla/"
Now what I wanted to ask, is how do I create a startup script in
Debian, so that whenever the machine is re-started,
On Tue, May 27, 2003 at 02:45:52PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > i have a script which i want to run just aftert the system has booted
> up and
> > before the login prompt is shown to the user...where do put this
> script ? i
> > am running debian woody.
>
> I think you can put it in /etc/rc
man update-rc.d
On Tuesday, May 27, 2003, at 06:51 AM, Sharninder Singh-662 wrote:
hi
i have a script which i want to run just aftert the system has booted
up and
before the login prompt is shown to the user...where do put this
script ? i
am running debian woody.
regards
sharninder
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On Thu, Jan 09, 2003 at 01:06:43PM -0800, Daniel L. Miller wrote:
> Thank you all for the dmesg tip.
>
> Following is a copy of my startup. Can anyone give me a tip on any
> potential problems or inefficiencies noted here - in particular the
> messages regarding my USB setup.
>
> IPX Portions Cop
On Thu, 9 Jan 2003 15:42:58 -0500
"Michael P. Soulier" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
| On 09/01/03 Daniel L. Miller did speaketh:
|
| > How can I log all the messages generated during boot? The stuff that
| > talks about the peripherals detected, driver loading, etc.
|
| man dmesg
|
| Mik
Thank you all for the dmesg tip.
Following is a copy of my startup. Can anyone give me a tip on any
potential problems or inefficiencies noted here - in particular the
messages regarding my USB setup.
Linux version 2.4.18-bf2.4 (root@zombie) (gcc version 2.95.4 20011002
(Debian prerelease)) #1 S
On 09/01/03 Daniel L. Miller did speaketh:
> How can I log all the messages generated during boot? The stuff that
> talks about the peripherals detected, driver loading, etc.
man dmesg
Mike
--
Michael P. Soulier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, GnuPG pub key: 5BC8BE08
"...the word HACK is used as
Once your system is up log in as root and execute "dmesg"
Also see if your system has a /var/log/dmesg, this file is written at
boot time but future messages are not appended.
Thus spake Daniel L. Miller ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> How can I log all the messages generated during boot? The stuff th
Andrew Perrin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
This is an old issue, but it's started to bug me again.
On my home machine (used to be potato 2.2.19pre17, it's now woody 2.4.18),
ipmasq and openafs-client don't start up correctly from /etc/init.d. The
scripts are there, and appear to be linked correc
* Osamu Aoki <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 2001-11-02 10:59 -0500:
> On Thu, Nov 01, 2001 at 10:49:15AM -0500, Andre Berger wrote:
> > I have a question about changing the startup order (init 2) of
> > /etc/init.d/{dhcpcd,pcmcia,ntpdate}. The problem is, the dhcp client
> > is executed before the PCMCIA stu
* Stephen E. Hargrove <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 2001-11-01 15:32 -0500:
> * Andre Berger ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) babbled:
> > What I need is the PCMCIA stuff already started up, this being done,
> > the DHCP client started up, this being done (it takes a few seconds),
> > ntpdate. How would I proceed, jus
On Thu, Nov 01, 2001 at 10:49:15AM -0500, Andre Berger wrote:
> Hi everyone
>
> I have a question about changing the startup order (init 2) of
> /etc/init.d/{dhcpcd,pcmcia,ntpdate}. The problem is, the dhcp client
> is executed before the PCMCIA stuff loads. So there is no network
> connection whe
* Andre Berger ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) babbled:
> What I need is the PCMCIA stuff already started up, this being done,
> the DHCP client started up, this being done (it takes a few seconds),
> ntpdate. How would I proceed, just rename the links in /etc/rc2.d/?
that's what i did.
> What could happen
Put a file called local (or whatever you want) in "/etc/init.d/"
and then use update-rc.d to set it up to run. See "man update-rc.d".
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Michael Grover) writes:
> In debian I don't find a rc.local file, is there a file that I can use
> to run some shell scripts at boot?
>
>
> i'm getting into this debate.
> what's the switches for ps that'll show all the daemons i'm running?
> just ps just gives me the obvious processes.
ps aux | more for linux or bsd, etc
or ps -fu for SunOS
> > no, NFS == Network File System (more accuratly known as No File
> > Security ;-) it
ps just gives me the obvious processes.
>
> > -Original Message-
> > From: Ethan Benson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: 28 April 2000 15:45
> > To: w trillich
> > Cc: John Pearson; debian-user@lists.debian.org
> > Subject: Re: startup/connection tr
> Cc: John Pearson; debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: Re: startup/connection trubble [was Modules & name
> resolution]
>
>
> On Fri, Apr 28, 2000 at 08:59:34AM -0500, w trillich wrote:
> >
> > nfs = network fileshare system (or similar)? as in, a windows
On Fri, Apr 28, 2000 at 08:59:34AM -0500, w trillich wrote:
>
> nfs = network fileshare system (or similar)? as in, a windows user
> can see a volume icon on their desktop from the linux box? don't
> need that... (the appletalk stuff is still operational... does
> it need NFS?)
no, NFS == Network
John Pearson wrote:
> > > The "net-pf-18" message is the kernel trying to load the module
> > > for network protocol family 18, which linux/include/net/socket.h
> > > lists as "Ash", with which I'm not familiar. If it represents a
> > > protocol family that you don't intend to support, or you just
On Wed, Apr 26, 2000 at 10:50:09PM -0500, w trillich wrote
> hey john -- thanks for the informative reply!
>
> John Pearson wrote:
> >
> > > my syslog was complaining of something quite similar, so maybe
> > > you already helped my problem a bit. from syslog...
> > > Apr 25 21:29:48 server modpro
hey john -- thanks for the informative reply!
John Pearson wrote:
>
> > my syslog was complaining of something quite similar, so maybe
> > you already helped my problem a bit. from syslog...
> > Apr 25 21:29:48 server modprobe: Note: /etc/modules.conf is more
> > recent than /lib/modules/2.0.36/m
On Thu, 27 Jan 2000 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> During shutdown process, I SOMETIME obtain the following error message :
>
> (A) "can't umount /dev/hda3, '/' is busy".
I'm not sure what would cause this, but it can happen if the init scripts
try to close down the root partition before all the p
Fredrik Appelberg wrote:
>
[Disclaimer in advance: I'm not an expert on any of this, but I have
come up against the same issues; all my answers are only from memory, so
read the docs on my suggestions before blindly following them]
> Allright, now I finally got my sb live soundcard working (debi
Don't know about your second question, but I think I can help with the
first.
Take a look at /etc/modules You'll want to list any modules you want to
load (and their parameters) one per line in that file.
Ex Redhatter huh? Welcome to the light. :)
On Mon, 17 Jan 2000, Fredrik Appelberg wrot
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